the geriatric giants medicine 400 jane courtney hollywood private hospital 30 th june 2008

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THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

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Page 1: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

THE GERIATRIC GIANTS

MEDICINE 400

Jane Courtney

Hollywood Private Hospital

30th June 2008

Page 2: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Immobility

Instability

Incontinence

Impaired intellect/memory

Page 3: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Impaired vision

Impaired hearing

Delirium

Poly-pharmacy

Care provision

Page 4: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Assessment

Multi-disciplinary

Functional - adl’s

- iadl’s

Problem oriented

Page 5: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

FALLS

Page 6: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

INCIDENCE

– 30% community dwellers >65 years– 50% long term care– 60% fall in last year

Page 7: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

CONSEQUENCES

• 10 –15% fracture

• Decrease in functional status

• 2% injurious falls result in death

Page 8: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

COSTS

• 8% ED presentations >70 years

• 33% of these admitted

• Median stay 8 days

Page 9: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

RISKS

• Rarely single cause

Page 10: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Falls usually occur when a threat to the normal homeostatic mechanisms that maintain postural stability is superimposed on age-related declines in balance,ambulation and cardiovascular function.

Threat

•Acute illness

•Environmental stress

•Unsafe walking surface

Page 11: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

RISK FACTORS

• Age

• Female

• Past fall

• Cognitive impairment

• Lower limb weakness

• Balance disturbance

Page 12: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

RISK FACTORS

• Psychotropic meds

• Arthritis

• Past CVA

• Orthostatic hypotension

• Dizziness

Page 13: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

AGE RELATED FUNCTIONAL DECLINE

• Visual

• Proprioceptive

• Vestibular

Page 14: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

ENVIRONMENT

• FOOTWEAR

• HOME MODIFICATIONS

• BEHAVIOUR

• SAFETY DEVICES

• SOCIAL INTEGRATION

Page 15: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

DISEASE RELATED FUNTIONAL DECLINE

Page 16: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

neurological

• CVA

• Parkinsons

• Cerebellar

• Neuropathy

• Dementia

• Delerium

• Epilepsy

Page 17: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

cardiovascular

• Arrythmia

• Orthostatic hypotension

• Anatomical

• Vasomotor instability

Page 18: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

GIT

• Bleeding

• D&V

• Defecation syncope

Page 19: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

metabolic

• Hypothyroid

• Hypoglycemia

• Hypokalemia

• hyponatremia

Page 20: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

UGS

• Micturition syncope

• Nocturia

• Incontinence

Page 21: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

musculoskeletal

• Arthritis

• Myopathy

• Deconditioning

Page 22: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Psychiatric

• Anxiety

• Depression

Page 23: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

medications

• Antihypertensives and cardiac

• Antidepressants

• Antipsychotics

• Benzodiazepines

• Levadopa

• Narcotics

Page 24: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

toxins

• Alcohol

Page 25: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

MECHANISM

• SYNCOPE /HYPOTENSION

• SEIZURE

• DIZZINESS / BALANCE

• GAIT DISTURBANCE

• PAIN / WEAKNESS

• MECHANICAL FALL

Page 26: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

FUNCTIONAL IMPAIRMENT

• BP regulation• Central processing• Gait• Neuromotor function• Postural control• Proprioception• Vestibular• vision

Page 27: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

EVALUATION

• History esp of fall

• Examination esp BP, balance, vision, gait

• Get up and go

• Divided attention

• Tests

Page 28: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

PREVENTION

• Strength and balance

• Education

• Medications

• Environmental mods

Page 29: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

PREVENT COMPLICATIONS

Page 30: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

DEMENTIA

Page 31: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Causes of Cognitive Impairment

J-0

Page 32: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

1 Delirium

• Sepsis

• Hypoxia

• Biochemical disturbances

Calcium, sodium, glucose,urea,hepatic

Page 33: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

DEFINITION

• An acute organic mental syndrome characterized by:

• Global cognitive impairment

• Reduced consciousness

• Disturbed attention

• Psychomotor activity

• Sleep-wake cycle disturbance

Page 34: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

2 Neurological disease

• Brain tumour

• Stroke

• Subdural

Page 35: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

3 Psychiatric Disease

• Depression

• Anxiety

• Alcohol or other substance abuse

Page 36: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

4 Medications

Page 37: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

5 “Classics”

• Thyroid

• B12

• Folate

Page 38: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

6 Benign Forgetfulness

Page 39: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

7 Dementia

Page 40: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Definition of Dementia• The development of multiple cognitive deficits manifested by both

memory impairment and one or more of the following– Aphasia -Apraxia -Agnosia– Disturbance in executive functioning

• These cognitive deficits cause significant impairment in social or occupational functioning

• The course is characterized by gradual onset and continuing cognitive decline

• The cognitive deficits are not due to other CNS, systemic, or substance-induced conditions

• The deficits do not occur exclusively during the course of a delirium

• The disturbance is not better accounted for by another Axis I disorder

A-2

Reference: DSM-IV, pp 133-155.

Page 41: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

CRITERIA FOR DIAGNOSIS

• MEMORY IMPAIRMENT• OTHER COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT

– Language, motor skills, perception

• ADL IMPAIRMENT• INSIDIOUS ONSET• DETERIORATING• NO OTHER CAUSE

– Systemic,neurological, psychiatric

Page 42: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

CRITERIA FOR DIAGNOSIS

• PATHOLOGY- autopsy or brain biopsy

Page 43: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Comparison delirium and dementia

• Sudden onset

• Usually reversible

• Short duration

• Fluctuations

• Altered consciousness

• Associated illness

• Inattention

• Always worse at night

• Impaired variable recall

• Insidious onset

• Slowly progressive

• Long duration

• Relatively stable

• Normal consciousness

• Not associated

• Attention not sustained

• Can be worse at night

• Memory loss

Page 44: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TYPES OF DEMENTIA

• PRIMARY NEURODEGENERATIVE– CORTICAL

• Alzheimer’s disease

• Fronto-temporal dementias (Pick’s disease)

– SUBCORTICAL • Progressive supra nuclear palsy

• Huntington’s

• Lewy Body Disease

Page 45: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TYPES OF DEMENTIA

• VASCULAR– Multi-infarct– Biswangers disease

• INFECTIVE– Creutzfeld-jacob– AIDS– Neurosyphilis

Page 46: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TYPES OF DEMENTIA

• TRAUMA– Sub dural– Dementia pugulistica– radiotherapy

• NORMAL PRESSURE HYDROCEPHALUS

Page 47: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TYPES OF DEMENTIA

• ASSOCIATED WITH OTHER DISEASES– Parkinson’s– Wilson’s– Multiple sclerosis– Tumours– Vasculitis

Page 48: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnosis• Acquired decline in cognitive function of an

insidious and progressive nature– Loss of memory – Impairment of at least one of;

• Language• Perception• Praxis• Problem solving, planning, organization• Judgement, insight or abstract thought

– Decline in ability to perform activities of daily living

A-1

Page 49: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

• (A) Immunocytochemical staining of NFTs in the isocortex of human AD brain with the anti-tau antibody AT8

• (B) Immunocytochemical staining of senile plaques in the isocortex of human AD brain with the anti-amyloid antibody 4G8

A-7

A

B

Page 50: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Cholinergic Hypothesis• Role

– Acetylcholine (ACh) is an important neurotransmitter in areas of the brain involved in memory formation (eg. hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and amygdala)

• Impact– Loss of ACh occurs early in AD and correlates with the

impairment of memory

• Treatment approach– Enhancement or restoration of cholinergic function may

significantly reduce the severity of cognitive loss

A-9

Reference: Mayeux R, et al. N Engl J Med. 1999;341:1670-1679.

Page 51: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TREATMENT

Page 52: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Overall Management

• Is it Alzheimers? OR what?

• Are there any reversible components?

• Any specific treatments?

• Educate and support carer/family.

• Treat symptoms as they arise.

• Treat intercurrent problems.

Page 53: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Medications

• Can cause cognitive impairment

• Can treat memory loss (Alzheimer’s, DLB)

• Can treat symptoms

• Can prevent (vascular)

Page 54: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Cause Cognitive Impairment

• Sedatives

• Antidepressants

• Analgesics

• “SIADH”

• Antiepileptics

• Specials– Digoxin, cimetidine, lithium.

Page 55: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Treat Memory

• Cholinergics

• ?oestrogens

• Vitamin E

• Selegeline

Page 56: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Treat Symptoms

• Treat family

• Non pharmacological

• Antipsychotics

• Benzodiazepines

• ANTIDEPRESSANTS

Page 57: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Drug Utilization Trends in Dementia

T-5

Source: NDTI (Diagnosis codes: 3310, 2900, 2901, 2902, 2903, 2904), 1999.

Numberof Drug

Uses(000)

0

500

1000

1500

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999

Aricept

Risperdal

Haldol

Ativan

Vitamin E

Zoloft

Zyprexa

Page 58: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Feature ComparisonDose

Drug MoA Binding Escalation Dosing

Reminyl® AChEI, Competitive, 4-week steps bdnAChR reversible (od)

Aricept® AChEI Noncompetitive, 4/6-week steps odreversible

Exelon® AChEI Pseudo- 1-week steps bidirreversible

T-10

Page 59: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

AD REM 8 59

Neuron and Acetylcholine

M-4

Postsynaptic nerve terminal

N receptor

Presynaptic nerve terminal

M receptor

ACh

Acetic acid Choline

AChE

AChE inhibitor

Page 60: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

AD REM 8 60

Acetic acid Choline

Reminyl® Dual Mechanism of Action

M-6

Postsynaptic nerve terminal

Presynaptic nerve terminal

N receptor

M receptor

ACh

AChE

Reminyl binds to allosteric site on N receptor

Reminyl inhibits AChE

Page 61: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

INCIDENCE

• 15% - 30% community-dwelling

• 30% hospitalized

• 50% long-term care

Page 62: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Predisposes to

• Rashes

• Pressure sores

• Urinary tract infections

• Falls

• Fractures

• Increased risk of institutional care

Page 63: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Incontinence is abnormal at any age.

Prevalence increases with age.

At no age does it affect the majority of individuals.

Even with severe dementia not all people are incontinent

NEW INCONTINENCE MUST BE INVESTIGATED

INCONTINENCE IS A SYMPTOM

Page 64: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

• Transient or established.

• Urge, stress or overflow.

• Clinical.

Page 65: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008
Page 66: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Transient• D delirium• I infection• A atrophic vaginitis• P pharmaceuticals• P psychological (depression)• E excessive output• R restricted mobility• S stool impaction

Page 67: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

pharmaceuticals• Anticholinergics

• Alpha agonists (men)

• Alpha antagonists (women)

• Calcium channel blockers

• ACE inhibitors (cough)

• Diruretics

• Sedatives (and alcohol)

Page 68: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

Established

Patho-physiological mechanisms

detrusor overactivity

detrusor underactivity

obstruction

outlet incontinence

Each can be either neurogenic or non-neurogenic

Page 69: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008
Page 70: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008
Page 71: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

WHAT DO WE DO?

HISTORY

EXAMINATION

INVESTIGATIONS.

Page 72: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TYPE

FREQUENCY

PATTERN

MEDICAL

MEDICATIONS

FUNCTION

Page 73: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

FULL PHYSICAL….GUIDED

PELVIC

RECTAL

NEUROLOGICAL

STRESS

Page 74: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

VOIDING CHART

U&E, CALCIUM, GLUCOSE

URINALYSIS+/- MSU

RESIDUAL VOLUME

ULTRASOUND

URODYNAMICS

CYSTOSCOPY

Page 75: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

TREATMENT

FIRST THE CAUSE IN TRANSIENT

STRESS- PELVIC FLOOR EXERCISES

- WEIGHT LOSS

- OESTROGEN

- SURGERY

OBSTRUCTION - ALPHA ANTAGONIST

- SURGERY

Page 76: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

DO - ANTICHOLINERGIC

DU - CATHETER

PADS, BOTTLES, COMMODES

Page 77: THE GERIATRIC GIANTS MEDICINE 400 Jane Courtney Hollywood Private Hospital 30 th June 2008

A LAST WORD ABOUT POLYPHARMACY

THE GERIATRICIAN’S PEN

v’s A BALANCING ACT